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・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games
・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games – Men's 1000 metres
・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games – Men's 250 metres
・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games – Men's 500 metres
・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games – Women's 1000 metres
・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games – Women's 250 metres
・ Dragon boat at the 2010 Asian Games – Women's 500 metres
・ Dragon boat at the 2012 Asian Beach Games
・ Dragon boat at the Asian Games
・ Dragon Bone Stone
・ Dragon Bones
・ Dragon bones (disambiguation)
・ Dragon Book
・ Dragon Booster
・ Dragon Booster Trading Card Game
Dragon boundary mark
・ Dragon Boy
・ Dragon Boy (novel)
・ Dragon Boys
・ Dragon Breath
・ Dragon Breed
・ Dragon Bridge
・ Dragon Bridge (Da Nang)
・ Dragon Bridge (Ljubljana)
・ Dragon Buster
・ Dragon C2+
・ Dragon Capital
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・ Dragon Centre
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Dragon boundary mark : ウィキペディア英語版
Dragon boundary mark

The dragon boundary marks are cast iron statues of dragons on metal or stone plinths that mark the boundaries of the City of London. The dragons are painted silver, with details of their wings and tongue picked out in red. The dragon stands on one rear leg, the other lifted against a shield, with the right foreleg raised and the left foreleg holding a shield which bears the City of London's coat of arms, painted in red and white. This stance is the equivalent of the rampant heraldic 'attitude' of the supporters of the City's arms.
The design is based on two large dragon sculptures, high, which were mounted above the entrance to the Coal Exchange on Lower Thames Street, designed by the City Architect, J. B. Bunning, and made by London founder, Dewer, in 1849. The dragons were preserved when the Coal Exchange was demolished in 1962–3. The two original statues were re-erected on high plinths of Portland stone at the western boundary of the City, by Temple Gardens on Victoria Embankment, in October 1963.
The Corporation of London's Streets Committee selected the statues as the model for boundary markers for the city in 1964, in preference to the fiercer dragon by C. B. Birch at Temple Bar on Fleet Street. Half-size replicas of the original pair of dragons made by Birmingham Guild Limited were erected at main entrances to the City of London in the late 1960s. In addition to the Birch dragon at Temple Bar, and the two original Coal Exchange statues on Victoria Embankment, there are two replicas of the Coal Exchange dragon at the south end of London Bridge, two on High Holborn near Gray's Inn Road, and single replicas on Aldgate High Street, Bishopsgate, Moorgate, Goswell Road (north of Aldersgate Street), Farringdon Street, and at the south end of Blackfriars Bridge. There is also an example at Lake Havasu City, Arizona, where the 19th century London Bridge was reconstructed in 1971.

File:England_Dragon_statue.jpg|One of the two original statues from the Coal Exchange
File:City_of_London_marker,_High_Holborn_WC2_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1318996.jpg|Smaller replica version on Holborn
File:London Bridge, Lake Havasu City (6630236349).jpg|Example in Arizona
File:Temple-bar-griffin.jpg|Dragon at Temple Bar, to a different design

==References==

* (Public sculpture of the city of London ); Philip Ward-Jackson; Liverpool University Press, 2003; ISBN 0-85323-977-0, pp. 422–3
* (The London encyclopaedia ); Christopher Hibbert, Ben Weinreb, Julia Keay, John Keay; Pan Macmillan, 2008; ISBN 1-4050-4924-3, p. 974
* (City dragon ), Save our Statues, Public Monuments and Sculpture Association
*(City of London Boundary Dragons ), emminlondon.com


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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